
The electronic dance music world is buzzing with excitement. Recent social media posts suggest a groundbreaking collaboration between Insomniac Events (the masterminds behind Electric Daisy Carnival and Electric Forest) and Tomorrowland, two of the biggest EDM festival brands globally. This partnership could reshape the festival landscape as we know it. Or are these EDM titans trolling us?
What the posts reveal
The simultaneous Facebook posts from Insomniac and Tomorrowland on Facebook at 10am on Sunday, March 23, 2025 strongly suggests this was a coordinated announcement, although the details of the announcement are currently unclear.

The post on Tomorrowland’s Facebook and Instagram pages show a photo of the drone show and fireworks display at the main stage at Electric Daisy Carnival (EDC) Las Vegas in 2023. It features the message “All Are Welcome Here” alongside spectacular production elements including a drone light show forming the Insomniac eye logo.

Meanwhile, Insomniac Events (EDC’s parent company) shared a post with the inspirational message “Live Today, Love Tomorrow, Unite Forever.” This post showcases similar production styles with a purple drone formation with the Tomorrowland logo above the elaborate fantasy castle-hemed 2023 main stage.
Fan Reactions
The electronic dance music community has responded with overwhelming enthusiasm. This dream collaboration excites many fans who watched these festival powerhouses operate as competitors for years. After the Tomorrowworld 2015 fiasco in Georgia, skepticism spreads among others who remember Tomorrowland’s troubled USA rendition. Others express their concern over ticket prices and an EDM festival monopoly. Some fans simply wonder: are these companies just trolling us?

Here at Electric Feels, we don’t think so. After all, April Fools’ Day hasn’t arrived yet. Insomniac’s worldwide EDC brand could potentially invest or merge with Tomorrowland in Belgium, especially considering Tomorrowland’s previous financial instability. Perhaps we’ll see Tomorrowworld USA return, as 2025 marks the 10th anniversary of its demise. The timing works perfectly – this announcement comes roughly six months before those traditional end-of-September Tomorrowworld dates.

A new Tomorrowworld in 2025 is not out of the question, but it remains unclear where the festival would take place. The event could even take place neither in Europe or North America, but on another continent. Alternatively, perhaps this announcement will bring something else entirely—only time will tell.